Ansiprint is a utility for printing text files (or stdin) from remote terminals using ANSI telnet escape sequences. It was inspired by the ansiprt.c component of the University of Washington's excellent email package, PINE. However, since the author believed that ansiprt.c was released under "somewhat ridiculous terms", ansiprint has been completely re-written in C++, and includes a variety of new features.

Apsfilter is a magic printfilter, allowing you to print different document
types "automagically" without having to convert them manually into something
which is understood by your printer. Apsfilter is a mature and powerful
printing solution for any flavor of Unix running lpd or LPRng. It supports the
latest GhostScript version and 3rd-party printer drivers (such as hpijs, ijs,
hpdj, pcl3, and gimp-print). It autodetects lots of file, archive, and
compression types. It supports printing on local as well as on Appletalk, Unix,
and Windows remote printers. General and "per printer-queue" based config files
allow you to configure the printer for your needs. The lpr command line options
allow you to change printing parameters like print quality, orientation, duplex
mode, etc. "on the fly" without having to edit any config file. A SETUP script
helps you to test various supported ghostscript drivers prior installation,
makes the necessary entries in /etc/printcap, creates spool directories, and
creates apsfilter default config files as needed. A handbook in HTML is
available. Several tools are also included: "aps2file" allows you to print to a
file via apsfilter, "apspreview" previews files as generated by apsfilter using
gv and friends, and "apsfilter-bug" assists you in doing bug and problem
reports.

CUPS is a standards-based printing system for Mac OS X and other Unix-like operating systems. It provides the System V and Berkeley command line interfaces, and uses the Internet Printing Protocol ("IPP") as the basis for managing print jobs and queues. The Line Printer Daemon (LPD) Server Message Block (SMB), and AppSocket (a.k.a. JetDirect) protocols are also supported with reduced functionality. CUPS adds network printer browsing and PostScript Printer Description ("PPD") based printing options to support real world printing.

CUPS is a wonderful printing system that uses the emerging IPP protocol. The only drawback is that there is quite no free driver available to print with. CUPS-drivers address this issue by providing a generic printer driver using GNU GhostScript. Not many printers are supported to date, but all is in place to support as many printers as GS can. If GS supports your printer, then CUPS-drivers will support it as well. Help and feedback are welcomed.

Cyrprint converts postscript files generated by netscape (original pages must be in koi8 encoding). It can be used as a pass-through filter. It adds cyrillic fonts to the beginning of the file and substitutes font names in the original PS document. The substitution and addition of fonts can be controlled with styles.

Disc-cover provides an easy way to produce covers
for audio CDs. It scans audio CDs and uses
information from the CDDB or CDINDEX database to
build a back and front cover for the CD. Output is
in Latex, Dvi, PDF, Postscript, HTML, plain ASCII,
or any other format suited for cdlabelgen.